Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Source Card – Book 304.5 1 O Owen, David. None of the above: Behind the Myth of Scholastic Aptitude. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1985. Call Number Author.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Source Card – Book 304.5 1 O Owen, David. None of the above: Behind the Myth of Scholastic Aptitude. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1985. Call Number Author."— Presentation transcript:

1 Source Card – Book 304.5 1 O Owen, David. None of the above: Behind the Myth of Scholastic Aptitude. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1985. Call Number Author Title City where published Publisher Date of publication Source #

2 Source Card – Website Alston ( or Same Sex Marriages, should America Allow it ) 2 Alston, Robin. “Same Sex Marriages, should America Allow it?” Harvard Debate. 2008: p1-1, 1p. 16 April 2009. Author’s Last name or Title of website Author Title of article Full website address Date posted and pg # Date you looked it up on the internet Source # Website Title

3 Note Card – Direct Quote Owen, 246 1 “Marriage has been an institution since the beginning of time. It was traditional between a man and a woman, but times have changed.” Author or title of article on website Heading Direct quote from publication Source #

4 Note Card – Paraphrase Alston, 15 2 Same Sex Marriages This source says that children that are raised in same sex marriages often are more adjusted to the outside world. Author or article title Heading Paraphrase from the publication Source #

5 Note Card – Summary Jones, 233 3 What is marriage? A summary in your own words. Author or article title Heading A summary in your own words from the publication Source #

6 Parenthetical Citations – Book with Author’s name mentioned in text Use the author's name in a single sentence to introduce the material. Then, cite the page number(s) in parentheses. Example Pope was clear to point out that, although many of his ideas were idealistic, Rousseau held ambivalent feelings toward women (138). Author’s name mentioned in sentence Just needs the page number.

7 Parenthetical Citations – Book with Author’s name not mentioned in text When you do not include the author's name in the text, place the author's last name in the parenthetical citation before the page number(s). There is no punctuation between the author's name and the page number(s). Example During World War I, British and American women could, for the first time, earn first-class pay for first- class work (Gilbert 236-7). Needs Author’s last name and the page number(s).

8 Parenthetical Citations – Website with an author Because Internet sources typically have no page or paragraph numbers, and Web sites in particular are often anonymous, people are often confused about how to refer to these sources within their papers. The answer is to cite the author's name whenever possible and use the source's title otherwise (or a shortened version of the title). Keep in mind that the primary purpose of an in-text citation is simply to point readers to the correct entry on the Works Cited Page. Example Despite the many challenges she has faced on the Internet, the author still enjoys the "magic" of the MOO (Dibbell). Use the Author’s last name no page #

9 Parenthetical Citations – Website without an author If the electronic document does not have an author, use identifying words from the title. Example Each of the teletubbies has his/her own language acquisition level, and, because of this, a child can identify and progress to the next language level when the child feels comfortable ("The Inside Story"). Use the title of the selection.


Download ppt "Source Card – Book 304.5 1 O Owen, David. None of the above: Behind the Myth of Scholastic Aptitude. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1985. Call Number Author."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google